The owner of Predator Control Corp, Trevor Walch, operates in large districts in western states, including Nevada and Wyoming. He offers clients cattle calving protection and has helped reduce their annual calf losses to less than one percent. To further agriculture education in Nevada, Trevor Walch has donated to the Nevada FFA Foundation.
The Nevada FFA Foundation follows strict policies and procedures to help make sure that activities are safe and predictable. In the Nevada FFA Policies and Procedures document, students are required to follow certain conduct.
First, students must be escorted by someone from the chapter or zone they represent, and they are under the liability of their school’s district. Second, students who are part of the Nevada FFA are not allowed to use tobacco, drink alcoholic beverages, or use obscene language.
The students’ chaperones are obligated to take responsibility for the behavior of their wards. Nevada FFA members are also not allowed to show “overly affectionate display of attention” at any FFA event or function. None of them are allowed to use any vehicles, as well, without first obtaining permission from the advisor or chaperone in charge.